Letter Writing Centre

Make your voice heard. Write to your representatives and help protect lawful shooting, hunting and outdoor recreation in Tasmania.

Writing a letter makes a difference

Respectful, personal letters from everyday Tasmanians are one of the most effective ways to show elected representatives that lawful firearm owners, hunters, farmers, clubs and outdoor recreation supporters care deeply about this issue.

In five minutes, you can write a clear and respectful letter asking your representatives not to support further restrictions on law-abiding Tasmanians.

Three steps to get started

Step 1

Find who to write to

Start with your local representatives, then consider writing to Ministers, party leaders and key decision makers.

Step 2

Choose your key points

Focus on the issues that matter most to you, your family, your club, your farm, your business or your community.

Step 3

Send your letter

Use your own words where possible. A personal and respectful letter is always stronger than a copied template.

Who should I write to?

Start with your local representatives first. You can also write to Ministers, party leaders and other key decision makers.

Use the representative panel to search, filter and sort. Pick one person at a time and use the “Use in letter” button to load their details into the letter builder.

Key points you may wish to raise

Focus on evidence-based policy, fair treatment of licensed owners, concerns about arbitrary caps and buybacks, proper consultation, and stronger action against illegal firearms and criminal misuse.

Letter point categories are being updated. The guidance below is shown as a fallback.

A. Evidence-based policy

Firearm law changes should be based on clear evidence, not public perception or political pressure.

  • Any changes to firearm laws should be based on clear evidence, not public perception or political pressure.
  • The Government should explain how proposed firearm caps or buybacks would reduce crime or improve public safety.
  • Policy should target the source of firearm crime, not people who are already licensed, checked and compliant.
  • Law changes should be supported by data, proper risk assessment and transparent reasoning.

B. Law-abiding firearm owners are not criminals

Licensed firearm owners already operate under strict rules, checks and compliance requirements.

  • Licensed firearm owners already undergo background checks, waiting periods, storage requirements and ongoing compliance.
  • Law-abiding Tasmanians should not be punished for the actions of criminals.
  • The focus should be on illegal firearms, firearm trafficking, organised crime and violent offenders.
  • Compliant firearm owners should be treated fairly and proportionately.

C. No arbitrary firearm caps

Any proposed firearm cap must be clearly justified and reflect legitimate needs.

  • Any proposed firearm cap must be justified with clear evidence.
  • The Government should explain how any cap number was chosen and whether it is based on research or risk.
  • A single blanket cap may not fairly reflect different legitimate needs, licence categories, sports, occupations or rural uses.
  • Firearm ownership should be assessed against genuine reason, safe storage and compliance, not an arbitrary number.

D. Concerns about buybacks

Buyback proposals must be properly justified, costed and targeted at genuine public safety outcomes.

  • A buyback targeting law-abiding owners may be costly while doing little to address illegal firearms or criminal misuse.
  • Public money may be better directed toward enforcement, border control, illegal firearm trafficking and repeat violent offenders.
  • Any buyback proposal should clearly explain the cost, scope, evidence base and expected public safety benefit.
  • Lawful owners should not be forced to surrender legally acquired property without clear justification and fair process.

E. Sporting, club and recreational impacts

Shooting clubs and sporting shooters are part of safe, structured and responsible community sport.

  • Shooting clubs provide safe, structured and supervised environments.
  • Sporting shooters often require different firearms for different disciplines, calibres, competition requirements and backup equipment.
  • Further restrictions could reduce participation, harm clubs and discourage juniors, families and volunteers.
  • Clubs contribute to regional communities, local businesses, events and responsible firearm education.

F. Hunting, farming and land management

Firearms are practical tools for many Tasmanians, especially in rural and regional areas.

  • Firearms are practical tools for farmers, landholders and hunters.
  • Pest control, livestock protection and property management are real needs in rural and regional Tasmania.
  • Hunting also plays a role in food gathering, conservation and land management.
  • Blanket restrictions may disproportionately affect rural and regional Tasmanians.

G. Industry and economic impacts

Law changes can create real financial, administrative and economic impacts across Tasmania.

  • Firearm law changes can affect clubs, dealers, ranges, trainers, event organisers, farmers, pest controllers and regional businesses.
  • New laws may increase licensing costs, storage costs, compliance costs and administrative workload.
  • The Government should explain who bears these costs and whether the burden is justified.
  • Any economic and social impacts should be properly assessed before changes are made.

H. Consultation and transparency

Affected communities deserve genuine consultation before decisions are made.

  • The people most affected by these laws deserve genuine consultation.
  • Sporting shooters, hunters, farmers, collectors, clubs, dealers, rural communities and industry groups should be included.
  • The Government should be transparent about who was consulted and what feedback was received.
  • If consultation has occurred, submissions, recommendations or summaries should be made public where appropriate.

I. Better focus on criminal enforcement

Public safety is best improved by targeting criminal misuse, not compliant people.

  • Resources should be focused on illegal firearms, organised crime, trafficking, border control and repeat violent offenders.
  • Law-abiding firearm owners are already known to authorities and subject to strict compliance requirements.
  • Public safety is best improved by targeting those who misuse firearms, not those who follow the law.
  • Existing laws should be properly enforced before adding more restrictions to compliant people.

J. Questions to ask MPs

Clear, direct questions help keep the discussion focused on evidence, fairness and public safety.

  • What evidence supports firearm caps?
  • How will these laws reduce crime?
  • How many firearm offences involve legally owned firearms?
  • What consultation occurred before these proposals were developed?
  • Were hunters, farmers, clubs, collectors, dealers and sporting shooters properly consulted?
  • Why is the focus on licensed owners rather than illegal firearms and criminal misuse?
  • What will the financial and administrative cost be?
  • Will you commit to opposing unfair restrictions on law-abiding Tasmanians?

K. Personal stories matter

A personal, respectful letter is often stronger than a copied template.

  • Explain your personal connection to shooting, hunting, farming, collecting, clubs or outdoor recreation.
  • Mention how proposed changes could affect your family, property, sport, business, club or community.
  • Keep your letter respectful, factual and personal.
  • A letter in your own words is stronger than a copied template.

How to write an effective letter

  • Be respectful, even if you strongly disagree.
  • Say who you are and where you are from.
  • Explain your personal connection to shooting, hunting, farming, clubs or outdoor recreation.
  • Keep the letter focused and easy to read.
  • Choose three or four key points rather than trying to say everything.
  • Ask them clearly not to support the proposed changes.
  • Ask for a written response.
  • Edit any template so it sounds like you.

Build your letter

Answer a few simple questions and create a respectful draft you can edit, copy and send from your own email account.

Using safe fallback campaign points while managed content is updated.

Start your letter

Enter a few details so we can personalise your letter, understand where support is coming from, and count your action as part of the SHOT campaign. Your personal details will not be published.

Basic technical information may also be collected for security, abuse prevention and campaign integrity.

1. Your details (optional)

These details are used to build the draft below. Saved supporter details above can be used to count campaign participation.

Selecting a representative helps us direct your letter and accurately count campaign activity.

2. I am writing as...

3. Issues I want to raise

Evidence-based policy

Firearm law changes should be based on clear evidence, not public perception or political pressure.

Law-abiding firearm owners are not criminals

Licensed firearm owners already operate under strict rules, checks and compliance requirements.

No arbitrary firearm caps

Any proposed firearm cap must be clearly justified and reflect legitimate needs.

Concerns about buybacks

Buyback proposals must be properly justified, costed and targeted at genuine public safety outcomes.

Sporting, club and recreational impacts

Shooting clubs and sporting shooters are part of safe, structured and responsible community sport.

Hunting, farming and land management

Firearms are practical tools for many Tasmanians, especially in rural and regional areas.

Industry and economic impacts

Law changes can create real financial, administrative and economic impacts across Tasmania.

Consultation and transparency

Affected communities deserve genuine consultation before decisions are made.

Better focus on criminal enforcement

Public safety is best improved by targeting criminal misuse, not compliant people.

Questions to ask MPs

Clear, direct questions help keep the discussion focused on evidence, fairness and public safety.

Personal stories matter

A personal, respectful letter is often stronger than a copied template.

4. Tone

5. Generated draft

Make this your own before sending. Personal letters are stronger than copied templates.

Please oppose further restrictions on lawful firearm owners

6. Actions

Open in email app

This opens your own email app so the letter comes from you.

Before you send

  • Have you added your name and suburb?
  • Have you made it personal?
  • Is it respectful?
  • Have you clearly asked them not to support the changes?
  • Have you asked for a reply?

Keep the pressure on

After you send your letter, encourage friends, family, club members and other supporters to do the same.

Join the SHO mailing list

Example letter

Personalise this before sending. Your own words are always stronger.

Subject: Please oppose further restrictions on lawful firearm owners

Dear [Representative Name],

I am writing as a concerned Tasmanian to ask that you do not support proposed changes to firearm laws that unfairly impact law-abiding firearm owners, hunters, farmers, clubs and outdoor recreation supporters.

Licensed firearm owners in Tasmania are already subject to strict rules, checks and responsibilities. The focus should be on illegal firearms, criminal misuse and proper enforcement of existing laws, not further restrictions on people who are already doing the right thing.

Shooting and hunting are important parts of life for many Tasmanians. Clubs provide safe and supervised environments, support volunteers and families, and contribute to regional communities. Firearms are also practical tools for farmers, landholders and hunters who rely on them for pest control, land management and food gathering.

I believe any changes to firearm laws must be based on evidence, proper consultation and genuine public safety outcomes. The people most affected by these laws deserve to be heard before decisions are made.

Please do not support changes that punish law-abiding Tasmanians. I would appreciate a written response outlining your position on this issue.

Kind regards,

[Your Name]
[Your Suburb or Town]

Last step: send this from your own email account.

Need help putting your thoughts into words?

Personalise this before sending. Your own words are always stronger.

If writing letters is difficult, you can use the example below with an AI writing tool. Always read, edit and personalise the final letter before sending it.

Help me write a respectful letter to my Tasmanian Member of Parliament opposing unfair firearm law changes. I am a licensed firearm owner / hunter / clay target shooter / farmer / supporter of outdoor recreation. I want the letter to be calm, personal and factual. Please focus on evidence-based policy, no arbitrary firearm caps, concerns about buybacks, proper consultation and transparency, impacts on law-abiding owners, clubs, hunters, farmers, sporting shooters, dealers and regional communities, and why policy should focus on illegal firearms and criminal misuse. Keep it professional and make it sound like a normal Tasmanian resident wrote it.